Showing posts with label South Florida in the 1970s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Florida in the 1970s. Show all posts

Sunday, December 25, 2022

The day SNOW fell in South Florida

     

"Picking luscious oranges in beautiful 
Florida while you play in the
silvery snow in the north" 
Florida State Archives/Postcard Collection
circa 1900


                                   






By Jane Feehan

The first recorded snow in South Florida came to mind with our recent cold snap. The January 19, 1977 event slowly recedes from the memories of many locals while it remains an unknown to most of the state’s new residents.

The National Weather Service, for the first time since its founding in 1870, predicted “rain mixed with snow” for South Florida for that day, a Wednesday. The predicted cold front and high-pressure feature over the Mississippi Valley would drop temperatures to the mid-30s along the coast and to 30 degrees inland. Blustery weather with 25 mph winds would bring a wind chill factor of 7 degrees to some areas.

Weather experts later said the freezing level was at 1,500 feet with the ground temperature at about 40 degrees that day; it’s why the white stuff didn’t stick in Broward and Dade counties. Nevertheless, the first report of snow in Broward County came from Wilton Manors at 7:30 a.m., the time I saw it in Fort Lauderdale. The Fort Lauderdale International Airport reported snowfall from 8:30 to 9 a.m.  Snow was reported in nearly every city in Broward County.

Though no snow was reported from the Miami International Airport, reports of flurries came in from Opa-locka Airport and northern Miami Beach. One news account reported snow, farther south and west, in Homestead. Winds from the system (up to 40 mph) in the Florida Keys brought coastal flooding.  

Snow was heavier in West Palm Beach areas and in Boca Raton. Orange grove owners in Loxahatchee reported snow coming through the groves like a blizzard as wind speeds ramped up over 30 mph. An accumulation of about a half inch was reported.

Map Jan. 19, showing cold wave
affecting Florida
NOAA  - Public Domain
via Wikipedia

For some, snow accumulation brought welcome relief. Workers stayed up past midnight in Central Florida to keep pots of fire fueled to raise temperatures, a frequent cold temperature-fighting tactic among orange growers when temps dip below 32. Vegetable growers pumped warm water—about 65 degrees—through irrigation canals. Helicopters could also be used as giant fans, but things changed when the snow arrived about 1 a.m. Overnight accumulations served as a blanket and dropped from cloudy skies, which also served to warm. Some farmers in the lower part of the state were somewhat relieved, but days later, crop losses and damage throughout the state totaled about $2 billion (1977 USD).

Snow or flurry reports were met with a wide range of responses.

Palm Beach County closed all schools, mainly because buildings didn’t have heat. Some schools closed in Broward; a few teachers said they wanted students to experience the rare event. 

The Key Biscayne Hotel, south of Miami, served coffee with brandy to all guests at a lobby warming station. 

A man in Fort Pierce mounted snow skis atop his car and drove around looking for a slope (or attention). 

One K-Mart store in West Palm had mistakenly received a shipment of snow shovels and snow sleds three weeks prior but placed them on display when they heard about the approaching cold front. Only after snow was reported did some think the store’s display was not only prescient but appropriate.   

Meanwhile up in Alaska on January 18, the Anchorage Hockey Association cancelled its games because ice on their outdoor rinks had melted.


Sources:

Fort Lauderdale News, Jan 19, 1977

Miami Herald, Jan. 20, 1977

Miami News, Jan. 19, 1977

Palm Beach Post, Jan. 20, 1977

Wikipedia


Tags: Fort Lauderdale snow, Snow in Miami, Fort Lauderdale history, Broward County history, Miami history